Logo

What do you think about Anthony Scaramucci saying that JD in JD Vance stands for "Just Dull?"

Last Updated: 27.06.2025 12:47

What do you think about Anthony Scaramucci saying that JD in JD Vance stands for "Just Dull?"

Not long after, he sparked controversy by criticising officials of the trump administration in an aggressively worded assault. Ten days later he was sacked.

He tweeted before the 2016 election that he thought Hillary Clinton would be the next president, but by 2015, he had changed his mind.

He lost his shine the moment he lost credibility when he continued to jockey for trump’s attention to retain and expand his power.

Antarctic detector picks up signals that defy all known laws of particle physics - Interesting Engineering

And like a Vance pendulum, in July 2019, he predicted that trump would win "40+ states in 2020" yet turned against him shortly thereafter. In 2024, Scaramucci reaffirmed his backing for Biden.

He has voiced his support for Kamala Harris but for how long is anyone’s guess. She might do something he disagrees with and then fickle Scaramucci will hit the skids as he always has.

Scaramucci became a member of the Trump Finance Committee in May 2016, following the withdrawal of Walker and Bush, whom he had endorsed.

Why is my ping so high in 1 Roblox game but not the other ones? I am also not laggy in my own private server. What is happening?

He’s playing the same pathetic immature schoolyard name-calling game that the Republicans do. It gives him nothing and takes him nowhere.

Then on July 21, 2017, trump appointed Scaramucci White House Communications Director.

In 2015, on a Fox Business Network television appearance, Scaramucci called trump a "hack politician" whose rhetoric is "anti-American and very, very divisive."

Trump military parade marking Army's 250th birthday takes place in Washington, D.C., today - CBS News

Talk about about failing miserably. Scaramucci backed Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in their presidential campaigns. He helped raise money for Barack Obama's presidential campaign in 2008.